Next up at the Kennedy Center? A new focus on hip-hop
WASHINGTON — It was late October 2017 and a packed house of VIPs had gathered at Washington’s Kennedy Center to watch David Letterman receive the Mark Twain award for a career in comedy. A stream of comedians took the stage to sing Letterman’s praises, and several couldn’t resist taking good-natured shots at the crowd.
Martin Short deadpanned, “It says a lot about America when people from different white backgrounds can gather together like this.”
Jimmie Walker — J.J. from the 1970s sitcom “Good Times” — put it more bluntly: “Look at the diversity in this crowd! I feel like Ben Carson at a Trump Cabinet meeting.”
Walker may have been going for the easy joke there, but he spoke to a deeper belief — that the Kennedy Center exists to serve an elite white audience despite its presence in a largely black city. That perception may linger for a while, but the reality is changing.


